Dealer Error Saves Waxman's Tournament
An interesting and somewhat controversial hand just went down at Table 447, one that cost Angel Pagan and saved both Matt Waxman and Jason Koon a lot of chips.
It happened Koon opened for 21,000 from the cutoff and Pagan moved all in for right around 174,000 from the button. As Pagan was grabbing his chips to slide them forward, the dealer mistakingly grabbed his cards and pulled them into the muck. "Whoa, whoa, whoa," several of the players said in an attempt to stop the dealer, though it was too late.
The floor was called and ruled that the hand was dead and Pagan would be require to call the bet before him but would keep the remainder of his chips. A few of the players disagreed, but the floor's ruling was consistent with the Estelle Denis ruling in the 2009 WSOP Main Event.
"It's alright," Pagan said even though he still seemed a bit miffed. Matt Waxman was in the small blind and asked the floor if Pagan could take all his chips back if the table agreed, but the floor told him it wasn't an option. Eventually the hand progressed with Waxman calling from the small blind and it was heads-up action to the flop.
Waxman ended up check-calling a bet of 30,000 before he and Koon checked the turn and river.
"Pair of fours," Koon said and tabled the . It was good as Waxman sent his cards to the muck.
"Would you have won?" someone asked Pagan.
"Yeah, I had queens," was the reply.
"I got lucky," Waxman admitted, "I was going to ship behind and I'd have lost."
It was a costly dealer error, but apparently it saved Waxman a ton of chips.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Jason Koon |
736,000
96,000
|
96,000 |
|
||
Matt Waxman |
365,000
5,000
|
5,000 |
|
||
Angel Pagan |
153,000
-72,000
|
-72,000 |